Friday, June 28, 2013

Triple G Intersection

I took a stroll down my childhood lane

These neural pathways took me back

Multilingual versions of the narrative

Warned me of imminent attack

I made it work for me my people

Bedeviled on behalf of all my greater good

I took my time in stride with sidewalks cracked

And broke my swag along a scattered beach

Came down with that viral capacity to fluctuate

According to what gut feeling feeds heart pumping

Where we intersect that jazz bebopper inhabiting art

Draw outside the lines come together in stark contrast

To the words we negotiate with each other in exchange

For favors better left unsaid yet enacted cross-purpose

To our intended lizard goal to wrap our prey entangled

Tongued in the mail entreated globally galactic guardian



I’d simply settle inside ambitious repose armed by you
Draped across our gossamer webs wet commingled faces

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SCIENCE AND HUMAN VALUES - J. Bronowski

THE DISCOVERIES OF SCIENCE, the works of art are explorations - more, are explosions, of a certain hidden likeness. The discoverer or the artist presents in them two aspects of nature and fuses them into one. This is the act of creation, in which an original thought is born, and it is the same act in original science and original art. But it is not therefore the monopoly of the man who wrote the poem or who made the discovery. On the contrary, I believe this view of the creative act to be right because it alone gives a meaning to the act of appreciation. The poem or the discovery exists in two moments of vision: the moment of appreciation as much as that of creation; for the appreciator must see the movement, wake to the echo which was started in the creation of the work.'
'Science is not a mechanism but a human progress, and not a set of findings but the search for them. Those who think that science is ethically neutral confuse the findings of science, which are, with the activity of science, which is not. To the layman, who is dominated by the fallacy of the comic strips, that science would all be best done by machines, the distinction is puzzling. But human search and research is a learning by steps of which none is final, and the mistakes of one generation are rungs in the ladder, no less than their correction by the next. This is why the values of science turn out to be recognizably the human values: because scientists must be men, must be fallible, and yet as men must be willing and as a society must be organized to correct their errors. William Blake said that 'to be an Error & to be Cast out is a part of God's design'. It is certainly part of the design of science.'
'The society of scientists is simple because it has a directing purpose: to explore the truth. Nevertheless, it has to solve the problem of every society, which is to find a compromise between man and men. It must encourage the single scientist to be independent, and the body of scientists to be tolerant. From these basic conditions, which form the prime values, there follows step by step a range of values: dissent, freedom of thought and speech, justice, honour, human dignity and self-respect.'